Tuesday, January 22, 2013

One Degree of Separation

I have long believed that there is one degree of separation in the world of healthcare IT. Everyone knows everyone and we're all connected in often amazing ways. Here's one such story.

When I was in college, I looked at the daunting cost of Stanford tuition, room, board, and living expenses (almost $15,000 per year!) and thought that I should leverage the impending microcomputer revolution by writing tax computation software for early CP/M-based machines. I did that from my dorm room (Kathy, my wife to be, wrote the manual). As our "company" grew, I knew that I wanted to expand to other platforms, including mini-computers. Only one problem - they were COBOL-based and I was not an expert in that language.

I spoke with a few contacts in the accounting software industry and they referred me to a high school student in Davenport, Iowa who was writing financial applications as part of saving for college.

I contacted him and we agreed to a partnership. My company would do sales, marketing, and support. He would write the tax software for COBOL users.

Since I was born in Des Moines, Iowa and still had family in Iowa, I agreed to meet AR Weiler during one of my trips to visit my grandparents. I recall meeting his parents and telling that I hoped our partnership would at least fund his college education.

The COBOL-based software sold a modest number of copies and was displaced by the emerging demand for MSDOS 1.0 applications when IBM introduced the PC and XT. I dutifully sent checks to AR Weiler whenever COBOL software was sold.

I lost touch with AR but understood that he went to Harvard University and majored in computer science, presuming using the funds from his COBOL programming to partially fund his education.

After college he took a job with Oracle, working on several initiatives related to Japan.

Imagine my surprise when I found that the CEO was none other than AR Weiler. His career since we worked together has included Emdeon, Ingenix, and Virgin Group.

It's truly a small world.

None of us can know exactly what will happen when we make choices and form relationships. A partnership formed 30 years ago between a college student and a high school student somehow led to a convergence in healthcare IT.

Fate is a wonderful enabler. Who knows what collaboration the future may bring. Another important reason to continuously help those around you, since the person you empower today may be the person you depend on tomorrow.

One Degree of Separation
Kang Yayat
2013-01-22T03:00:00-08:00
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I have long believed that there is one degree of separation in the world of healthcare IT. Everyone knows everyone and we're all conne...